'Black spinster' label pinned on Condi Rice

Condoleezza Rice depicted in Al Quds as pregnant with a monkey. The image’s caption read, “Rice speaks about birth of new Middle East.”

JERUSALEM – While U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has been in the Middle East meeting regional alongside Israel’s military campaign in Lebanon, media outlets controlled by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party the past few days have been using racist rhetoric in their reports, referring to the American representative as the “black woman,” “raven,” “colored dark skinned black lady” and “black spinster.”

The Palestinian media coverage follows an article last week in which WND reported senior Fatah members staged an anti-American protest outside the main government building in Ramallah while Abbas met with Rice. Most media coverage of last Wednesday’s Ramallah protests claimed ralliers were affiliated with Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

According to a translation by Palestinian Media Watch, the PA daily Al Hayat Al Jadida detailed Wednesday’s Ramallah protests in which Rice was described as a “raven” who “brings only destruction.”

A cartoon last week in the PA controlled Al Quds depicted Rice pregnant with a monkey. A caption read, “Rice speaks about birth of new Middle East.”

In a previous article by Al Hayat Al Jadida, Rice is described three times as the “black woman,” and her father, who was an ordained Presbyterian minister, was called the “black clergyman [who filled Rice’s head with Bible stories].” The article warned, “Beware of this ‘black spinster,’ we don’t want to say ‘the black widow’ out of respect for her femininity and her intelligence.”

WND reported from the scene in Ramallah last week as hundreds of protesters gathered outside a meeting between Abbas and Rice, many chanting, “Down with America,” “[Hezbollah leader Hassan] Nasrallah hit America,” “Fire rockets into Tel Aviv,” and “We don’t need American money.”

Palestinian police clashed with some protesters who tried to shove their way into the government building.

A group of ralliers who said they were affiliated with Fatah told WND they would try to charge Rice when she emerged.

The main protest organizer, who was outside leading the crowd, was Zyad Abu Ein, a senior Fatah official and general manager of the PA’s Ministry of Prisoners. Ein is well known to be a close Abbas confidante and is considered one of the most important members in Ramallah of Fatah’s Revolutionary Council.

Ein told WND aside from last week’s street protests near the Abbas-Rice meeting, he asked Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails to stage what he called a “day of rage” against Rice’s visit by not cooperating with prison wardens.

Editor’s note: Want to go deep inside some of the most dangerous terror organizations on the planet? How about knowing the news before it becomes news? Would you like to tap into some of the most comprehensive information streams from intelligence organizations in the Middle East and from throughout the world and be privy to the latest behind the scenes moves of global decision makers?

Now you can get all this and more sent directly to your e-mail regularly throughout the week FREE, just by being a subscriber to Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin, the premium, online intelligence newsletter published by the founder of WND. G2 Bulletin offers a new feature called “The Galil Report,” an intelligence e-mail newsletter edited by WND’s Jerusalem bureau chief Aaron Klein. The only way to get it is to become a subscriber to Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.